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FHWA Launches Series of National Meetings on Automated Vehicles


American Government

FHWA Launches Series of National Meetings on Automated Vehicles

Federal Highway Administration
7 June 2018


FHWA 08-18
Thursday, June 7, 2018
Contact: Nancy Singer
Tel.: (202) 366-0660

First in a series of ‘dialogues’ on the technology and roadway impacts held in Detroit

DETROIT –The U.S. Department of Transportation’s Federal Highway Administration (FHWA) today launched a series of meetings with key stakeholders to discuss the ramifications of automated vehicles on U.S. roads. The “national dialogue” meetings are being held across the country to engage a diverse group of stakeholders from industry and the public sector to understand the key areas of interest and concern.

“Cutting-edge technologies, like automated vehicles, have the potential to dramatically change the nation’s use of highways,” said Acting Federal Highway Administrator Brandye L. Hendrickson. “Without hampering innovation in our federal role, we need to fully understand such advances so we can inform our state and local transportation partners and anticipate their needs.”

The dialogues specifically focus on highway automation – essentially, the readiness of highway infrastructure, information and institutional systems for automated vehicles and related technologies. Participants will include industry leaders and other stakeholders who are involved in the planning, design, construction, operation and maintenance of U.S. roads as well as inviting automotive makers and technology providers.

FHWA will host several of these meetings nationwide throughout this year to facilitate information sharing, identify key issues and prepare the highway and broader transportation and infrastructure community to safely and efficiently incorporate automation on the roadway network. Areas of focus will include planning, policy, data and digital infrastructure, multimodal safety, infrastructure design, traffic operations and freight.

Though automated vehicles and related technologies hold the promise of saving lives while making travel more convenient and efficient, Hendrickson added that input from state departments of transportation and others will be needed to make informed decisions.

“Collaboration and information-sharing will be key to preparing for an infrastructure of the future,” she said, “which is why these dialogues are so important.”

The insights received during the sessions will inform national research, policy and programs and aid in the development of a national transportation community for automation.

More information is available from FHWA’s National Dialogue on Highway Automation website.

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